SardarMohammad Sulaiman Khan, who was a soldier in the mounted unit of the British army, received the position of military attaché; Sardar Fatih MohammadKhan Zikria became the magistrate and SardarMohammad Aziz Khan was appointed as cultural attaché.

SardarMohammad Nadir Khan who was in the British artillery was awarded the position of Brigadier at the royal guard.

Since Amanullah Khan was looking for a symbol for the remembrance of the independence war therefore, he made the mistake and instructed to build a monument in which the name of the mentioned personalities, instead of the names of the martyrs who bravely lost their lives for their land, was inscribed.

SardarMohammad Daud Khan (1909-1978), cousin and brother-in-law of King Zahir, president of the Republic from 17 Jul 1973 to 27 Apr 1978; previously, royal Prime Minister from 7 Sep 1953 to 10 Mar 1963; overthrown and assassinated in the coup ("Saur Revolution") staged by the military and the Communist Party on 27 Apr 1978.

Mullah Mohammad Rabbani Akhund (1956/1957-2001), reportedly the late second-ranking person of the Taliban movement as deputy head of the Supreme Council (or Shura) installed in Kandahar in 1994 and since 26 Sep 1996 head of the Shura installed in Kabul, which acted as a Provisional Government.

Sardar Ahmad Shah Khan Asifi received the military position of Sir Mir Espor, and Sardar Shah Mahmud Khan was appointed military chief of Parwanaha.

Nadir, who was in charge of the running of the plan against Amanullah Khan, because of the dismissing of his brother got angry and pretended that he was sick, and resigned.

In particularly, after the visit of Amanullah Khan to Moscow and the warm and sincere welcome he received, and the agreement on air transportation between Tashkent and Kabul caused the British authorities to engineer the fall of Amanullah Khan, planned originally for a year later in time.

Mohammad Najibullah (1947-1996), President of the Republic from 30 Sep 1987 to 16 Apr 1992; from 4 May 1986 general secretary of the HDKA, since Jun 1990 called HW; forced to resign on the advance of the mujaheddin over Kabul; captured and executed by the Taliban on 27 Sep 1996.

Mohammad Daud (?-), Tajik commander of the JIA party and of the anti-taliban UINFSA or Northern Alliance.

SardarMohammadHashimKhan (1885?-1953) was a politicalfigure (political figure: more facts about this subject) in Afghanistan (Afghanistan: A mountainous landlocked country in central Asia; bordered by Iran to the west and Russia to the north and Pakistan to the east and south).

He was the uncle of Mohammad Zahir Shah (Mohammad Zahir Shah: mohammed zahir shah (born october 16, 1914) was the last king of afghanistan...

He governed Afghanistan as royal Prime Minister (Prime Minister: The person who holds the position of head of state in England) from November 14 1929 until May 1946.

Secretary of the Election Commission Kanwar Mohammad Dilshad said that the scrutiny of nomination papers for a technocrat and a general seat from the federal capital accepted the nomination papers.

The Provincial Election Commissioner, Sono Khan Baloch, who was appointed as returning officer for senate election in Balochistan, scrutinized the nomination papers and rejected eight nomination papers on various grounds.

Except for the constitutional decade—when, as a prince, he was constitutionally barred from conducting politics—he was involved in the government from an early age, often exerting virtually unrestricted authority.

An ambitious person, Daoud was first cousin and brother-in-law of the former King Zahir as well as the eldest son of Mohammad Aziz, the eldest brother of the ruling Musahiban family (the late king Mohammad Nadir, the late premiers MohammadHashim and Shah Mahmud, and the late ambassador Shah Wali).

Daoud held a number of high military posts before he ruled as prime minister for a decade (1953-63), when he introduced reforms and established closer ties with Russia.

QUETTA, July 8: An accountability court on Friday convicted former Balochistan education minister Sardar Nasir Ali Hazara and three ex-officials of the department in a corruption reference.

Quetta Accountability Court Judge Mohammad Naeem Kakar sentenced Mr Hazara to seven-year imprisonment and a fine of Rs15.7 million when the prosecution proved the charge that illegal appointments in the education department caused loss to the national exchequer.

Three former directors of the department were also sentenced —- Raja Nasir Ahmed to five-year imprisonment and Rs8.4 million fine, Mirza Noor Ahmed to five-year imprisonment and Rs7.1 million fine and MohammadHashimKhan to one-year imprisonment and Rs250,000 fine.